TN: Tasting Le Piane at a Shop (March 13, 2025)

Jeff Grossman

Jeff Grossman
I was unable to attend any of the talks given or dinners hosted by Christophe Kunzli when he visited NYC recently but at least I could swing past a shop that was pouring a spread of his wines.

Le Piane was founded on the grounds of Antonio Cerri, the last of the old Boca makers still working the vines in 1988. Unlike many parts of Europe, the Boca region had not declined due to the ravages of the World Wars but simply lost its men to better economic opportunities nearby. (I think Diana said it was textiles.)

Boca vineyards are a PITA, narrow and steep, and therefore the vines are too close together for any helpful farm machinery. Everything carried on your back, everything done by hand. A factory job or a desk job might sound pretty appealing. But we are all grateful for Le Piane's wines.

Diana, whose last name I did not get, works for the importer and she is totally sharp, educated, and a delight to geek out with.

Le Piane 2023 Vino Bianco "Blanka" - interesting that the website names the grape "????" but Diana says it is erbaluce, this is just great: powerful acidity helps lift up this big viscous grape, clean and pure, I would never have given it a second look on the shelf but I love it (and bought)
Le Piane 2020 Vino Rosso "Mimmo" - young vines nebbiolo and vespolina; as it happens, I have a couple bottles of this wine at home already, typical mountain wine (meaning good acidity, light color, and light on flavor while it's young)
Le Piane 2019 Boca - more mountain wine, mature vines, but a troubled vintage (cold spring, deer intrusions, rain at harvest) so the wine is minerally but still very tight and not much fun to drink now, and there wasn't much of it
Le Piane 2018 Boca - released *after* the 2019, this was the best vintage in 20 years; I had a bottle of this a year ago and it is much more open now, full, fruitier, really good (should buy)
Le Piane 2022 Vino Rosso "maggiorino" - a kind of field blend that was common once upon a time, 13 (or more) local grape varieties (red and white, some very obscure (think: surprised ampelographers)), this has interesting flavors but is very grippy (and its page is hard to reach so click)
 
I met Christophe Kunzli briefly this past Saturday as he was pouring some of his wines in a San Francisco wine shop near me. Very friendly, affable guy, and I was able to pick his brain a little about Boca and the Alto Piemonte in general.

Very brief impressions below:

2021 Le Piane Vino Bianco "Blanka" Linear, acid-driven, minerally, and pure. This didn't feel texturally that viscous to me, but it may be a factor of the vintage. And Kunzli confirmed to me this is 100% Erbaluce. A really nice wine.

2023 Le Piane Colline Novaresi Nebbiolo An easy-drinking red that didn't exactly scream Nebbiolo to me aromatically, but had a touch of grip and lift that I imagine would pair well with a variety of foods. Not bad at all.

2019 Le Piane Vino Rosso "Mimmo" Definitely imbued with a more pronounced Nebbiolo character than the Colline Novaresi (despite having quite a bit of Vespolina and some Croatina in it) with some nice floral notes on the nose. A denser palate than the Colline Novaresi with dark fruit and bit of white pepper and spice woven in.

2017 Le Piane Boca Essentially a much more intense version of the Mimmo, with aromas of roses and dark cherries wafting out of the glass. While there is a bit of grip, the tannins are actually already quite silky and accessible, and there is plenty of fruit and spice and energy to make this quite enjoyable right now.

2018 Le Piane Vino Rosso "Piane" According to Kunzli, this is 100% Croatina and his take on a more "California" style of wine. Definitely the ripest wine of the bunch, quite velvety and lush on the palate, but there is still structure and acidity to keep it from being a gloopy bore. Not bad; like a tasteful Zinfandel.
 
Thanks for these notes! I'm a huge fan of the wines and it was the biggest disappointment of our trip to the region that Christophe Kunzli was out of town and we were unable to visit.

It's very hard to keep track of the vintages in the region (and it's also diverse within the region) although folks were generally very bullish on 2018.
 
originally posted by Jeff Grossman:

Le Piane 2023 Vino Bianco "Blanka" - interesting that the website names the grape "????" but Diana says it is erbaluce,

Curiously the German (and not the Italian) version of the website gives a different answer: Die Verwendung des griechischen Alphabets macht den Namen des Weins für alle lesbar und maskiert den Namen der Traube als Arlecchino.

Google translates: The use of the Greek alphabet makes the name of the wine readable for all and masks the name of the grape as Arlecchino.
 
It’s Erbaluce.

I had the lineup with Kunzli a few weeks ago at Flatiron in NYC. Very nice event. Love the wines although he has trended to make Mimmo more “serious” and I like it best a tad more red fruited and high toned than the latest release (2020).
 
originally posted by Yule Kim:

2018 Le Piane Vino Rosso "Piane" According to Kunzli, this is 100% Croatina and his take on a more "California" style of wine. Definitely the ripest wine of the bunch, quite velvety and lush on the palate, but there is still structure and acidity to keep it from being a gloopy bore. Not bad; like a tasteful Zinfandel.
Your description fits the data: 14,5% ABV and 7,5 g/l acid.
 
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